Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The complete list of candidates running for Corpus Christi City Council is now official, with Monday’s filing deadline now passed. Records show three more candidates attracted to the races on ...
In 2024 she proposed a law to force businesses such as bodegas, smoke-shops, and take-out restaurants in Kensington to close from 11 pm - 6 am. [6] She said the nuisance activity from these businesses such as excessive trash interferes with quality of life in the Kensington community and that it's part of a strategy to address the open-air drug ...
Kamillah M. Hanks (born September 4, 1972) is an American politician and New York City Council Member for the 49th District on the North Shore of Staten Island.. District 49 includes the neighborhoods of Arlington, Clifton, Clove Lakes, Concord, Elm Park, Graniteville, Livingston, Mariners Harbor New Brighton Port Richmond, Randall Manor, Rosebank, St. George, Snug Harbor, Silver Lake ...
Maria Quiñones-Sánchez was born in Puerto Rico on November 21, 1968. In 1969, at six months old, she moved to Philadelphia, along with her mother and two older brothers, to be closer to her father, who worked as a seasonal farmworker.
Fort Worth’s 2021 mayor and council elections brought five new members to the nine-person Fort Worth city council. In 2023, there will be at least three new members with two coming through the ...
He is one of four council members who formed the Kensington Caucus to help address issues like homelessness and drug abuse in the Kensington and Harrowgate areas of Philadelphia. [9] The caucus focuses on helping people with long-term recovery, bundling all services together including drug rehabilitation, halfway houses and behavioral health ...
In a workshop meeting on Dec. 18, Belmont City Council interviewed four potential candidates to fill a seat left vacant after Richard Turner was elected mayor last month.. Each candidate was given ...
Sara E. Nelson is an American businesswoman and politician serving as a Seattle City Council member from Position 9. A member of the Democratic Party, she defeated Nikkita Oliver in the 2021 election. On January 2, 2024, the city council voted unanimously to appoint her City Council President upon the retirement of Debora Juarez.